It was early afternoon when Theron walked out of his yard, bestowing no glance upon the withered and tarnished show of the garden, and started with a definite step down the street.The tendency to ruminative loitering, which those who saw him abroad always associated with his tall, spare figure, was not suggested today.
He moved forward like a man with a purpose.
All the forenoon in the seclusion of the sitting-room, with a book opened before him, he had been thinking hard.
It was not the talk with Alice that occupied his thoughts.
That rose in his mind from time to time, only as a disagreeable blur, and he refused to dwell upon it.
It was nothing to him, he said to himself, what Gorringe's motives in lying had been.As for Alice, he hardened his heart against her.Just now it was her mood to try and make up to him.But it had been something different yesterday, and who could say what it would be tomorrow?
He really had passed the limit of patience with her shifting emotional vagaries, now lurching in this direction, now in that.She had had her chance to maintain a hold upon his interest and imagination, and had let it slip.
These were the accidents of life, the inevitable harsh happenings in the great tragedy of Nature.They could not be helped, and there was nothing more to be said.
He had bestowed much more attention upon what the priest had said the previous evening.He passed in review all the glowing tributes Father Forbes had paid to Celia.
They warmed his senses as he recalled them, but they also, in a curious, indefinite way, caused him uneasiness.
There had been a personal fervor about them which was something more than priestly.He remembered how the priest had turned pale and faltered when the question whether Celia would escape the general doom of her family came up.It was not a merely pastoral agitation that, he felt sure.
A hundred obscure hints, doubts, stray little suspicions, crowded upward together in his thoughts.It became apparent to him now that from the outset he had been conscious of something queer--yes, from that very first day when he saw the priest and Celia together, and noted their glance of recognition inside the house of death.He realized now, upon reflection, that the tone of other people, his own parishioners and his casual acquaintances in Octavius alike, had always had a certain note of reservation in it when it touched upon Miss Madden.Her running in and out of the pastorate at all hours, the way the priest patted her on the shoulder before others, the obvious dislike the priest's ugly old housekeeper bore her, the astonishing freedom of their talk with each other--these dark memories loomed forth out of a mass of sinister conjecture.